STRIPED CHIPMUNK IS KEPT VERY BUSY
I prefer big acorns but I never refuse little ones.
They fit in between.
Happy Jack.
Striped Chipmunk was sitting just
inside a hollow log, studying about how he could fill
up his new storehouse for the winter. Striped
Chipmunk is very thrifty. He likes to play, and
he is one of the merriest of all the little people
who live on the Green Meadows or in the Green Forest.
He lives right on the edge of both and knows everybody,
and everybody knows him. Almost every morning
the Merry Little Breezes of Old Mother West Wind hurry
over to have a frolic with him the very first thing.
But though he dearly loves to play, he never lets
play interfere with work. Whatever he does, be
it play or work, he does with all his might.
“I love the sun; I love
the rain;
I love to
work; I love to play.
Whatever it may bring to me
I love each
minute of each day.”
So said Striped Chipmunk, as he sat
in the hollow log and studied how he could fill that
splendid big new storehouse. Pretty soon he pricked
up his funny little ears. What was all that noise
over in the Green Forest? Striped Chipmunk peeped
out of the hollow log. Over in the top of a tall
hickory tree a terrible fuss was going on. Striped
Chipmunk listened. He heard angry voices, such
angry voices! They were the voices of his big
cousins, Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel and Chatterer
the Red Squirrel.
“Dear me! Dear me!
How those two do quarrel! I must go over and see
what it is all about,” thought Striped Chipmunk.
So, with a flirt of his funny, little
tail, he scampered out of the hollow log and over
to the tall hickory tree. He knew all about that
tree. Many, many times he had looked up at the
big fat nuts in the top of it, watching them grow
bigger and fatter, and hoping that when they grew
ripe, Old Mother West Wind would find time to shake
them down to him. You know Striped Chipmunk is
not much of a climber, and so he cannot go up and
pick the nuts as do his big cousins, Happy Jack and
Chatterer.
When he reached the tall hickory tree,
what do you think was happening? Why, those big,
fat nuts were rattling down to the ground on every
side, just as if Old Mother West Wind was shaking
the tree as hard as she could. But Old Mother
West Wind wasn’t there at all. No, Sir,
there wasn’t even one of the Merry Little Breezes
up in the tree-tops. The big fat nuts were rattling
down just on account of the dreadful quarrel of Striped
Chipmunk’s two foolish cousins, Happy Jack and
Chatterer.
It was all because Happy Jack was
greedy. Chatterer had climbed the tree, and now
Happy Jack, who is bigger but not so spry, was chasing
Chatterer round and round and over the tree-top, and
both were so angry that they didn’t once notice
that they were knocking down the very nuts over which
they were quarreling.
Striped Chipmunk didn’t stop
to listen to the quarrel. No, Sir-ee! He
stuffed a big fat nut in each pocket in his cheeks
and scampered back to his splendid new storehouse
as fast as his little legs would take him. Back
and forth, back and forth, scampered Striped Chipmunk,
and all the time he was laughing inside and hoping
his big cousins would keep right on quarreling.